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'Mass Confusion' As Medical Marijuana Amendment Goes Into Effect

Even as the state prepares to carry out a constitutional amendment authorizing medical marijuana, a lack of guidance from health officials could create a "very murky and dangerous legal area" for patients and doctors.

Authors of the amendment, industry insiders and legislative leaders have called on the to clarify what doctors and dispensing organizations can legally do under existing state laws and the voter-approved amendment that went into effect on Tuesday.

To date, the health agency has remained mum, referring only to the language of the constitutional amendment overwhelmingly approved by voters in November and to state laws approved in 2014 and 2016.

Health officials have repeatedly refused requests for an interview with Office of Compassionate Use Director Christian Bax, who has been at the helm since the state's first pot purveyors started cultivating this year.

Recent questions center on whether doctors are allowed to add to an existing state database patients who qualify under the constitutional amendment, which includes a host of diseases not previously authorized for cannabis treatment.

Medical industry officials and a state lawmaker instrumental in the passage of current laws regulating medical marijuana advised doctors to be cautious.

A Department of Health spokeswoman provided little insight Tuesday when asked whether physicians are allowed to add patients eligible under so-called Amendment 2 to the existing database.

"Doctors should probably consult their legal representation to ask that question," agency spokeswoman Mara Gambineri said in a telephone interview.

Under current laws, doctors may order non-euphoric marijuana for patients with chronic muscle spasms or cancer, or full-strength marijuana for terminally ill patients.

But some doctors have started to add patients who meet the requirements of the broader Amendment 2 to the state-run "compassionate use registry," even before health officials have crafted rules governing the newly approved amendment.

In the meantime, proponents of Amendment 2 as well as some marijuana operators are demanding that the department provide adequate guidance to the industry about the proposal approved by more than 70 percent of Floridians in November.

The amendment, heavily bankrolled by Orlando trial lawyer John Morgan, legalized marijuana for patients with a host of illnesses, including cancer, glaucoma, AIDS, post-traumatic stress disorder, Crohn's disease, Parkinson's disease, multiple sclerosis or other debilitating medical conditions of the same kind or class enumerated by the amendment.

Ben Pollara, campaign manager of the political committee that led the drive to pass the amendment, accused the department of failing to provide clarity to doctors and patients about the impact of the constitutional amendment.

Privately, industry operators complained fiercely about the department's silence on the issue.

The agency has a brief message about the amendment posted on its website, advising that the initiative would become effective Tuesday. The current Florida law "remains in effect and the Florida Department of Health, physicians, dispensing organizations, and patients remain bound by existing law and rule," the website reads. "Following Amendment 2's effective date, the Department is directed to promulgate rules to implement Amendment 2 within six months, and to implement those regulations within nine months."

Another unanswered question is whether the dispensing organizations — licensed by the state to grow, process and distribute medical marijuana — will be in trouble for providing cannabis to patients who are registered in the state database but do not meet eligibility criteria under the 2014 and 2016 laws.

Currently, a patient must have a 90-day relationship with a doctor, who has to certify that the patient meets the requirements for the non-euphoric marijuana or, if terminally ill, for full-strength marijuana. The doctor then must enter the patient and treatment delivery orders into a state-run database.

State law makes it a crime for doctors to enter patients into the database if the patients do not meet the current statutory criteria for marijuana treatment.

Under Amendment 2, patients do not have to be entered into the statewide registry. Instead, doctors recommend the marijuana treatment, patients are then given identification cards — issued by the health department — and "medical marijuana treatment centers" fill orders for the cannabis treatment.

The amendment gives the state six months to craft rules related to the medical marijuana treatment centers, and nine months to start issuing patient ID cards.

But the head of at least one dispensing organization believes companies like hers do not have to wait for the amendment to be implemented, as long as doctors have ordered the treatment.

"There is definitely some confusion," CEO Kim Rivers said in an interview. "I can lose my license if I'm dispensing to someone who's not on the registry. If I am dispensing to someone on the registry, following all of our protocols, I do not believe that our license is at risk."

Copyright 2020 Health News Florida. To see more, visit .

The News Service of Florida
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